features.html 73.0 KB
Newer Older
1 2
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<!--
3
Copyright 2004-2018 H2 Group. Multiple-Licensed under the MPL 2.0, Version 1.0,
4 5 6 7
and under the Eclipse Public License, Version 1.0
Initial Developer: H2 Group
-->
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
8
<head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
9
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
10
<title>
11
Features
12 13
</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet.css" />
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33
<!-- [search] { -->
<script type="text/javascript" src="navigation.js"></script>
</head><body onload="frameMe();">
<table class="content"><tr class="content"><td class="content"><div class="contentDiv">
<!-- } -->

<h1>Features</h1>

<a href="#feature_list">
    Feature List</a><br />
<a href="#comparison">
    Comparison to Other Database Engines</a><br />
<a href="#products_work_with">
    H2 in Use</a><br />
<a href="#connection_modes">
    Connection Modes</a><br />
<a href="#database_url">
    Database URL Overview</a><br />
<a href="#embedded_databases">
    Connecting to an Embedded (Local) Database</a><br />
34 35
<a href="#in_memory_databases">
    In-Memory Databases</a><br />
36
<a href="#file_encryption">
37
    Database Files Encryption</a><br />
38 39 40 41
<a href="#database_file_locking">
    Database File Locking</a><br />
<a href="#database_only_if_exists">
    Opening a Database Only if it Already Exists</a><br />
42 43
<a href="#closing_a_database">
    Closing a Database</a><br />
44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61
<a href="#ignore_unknown_settings">
    Ignore Unknown Settings</a><br />
<a href="#other_settings">
    Changing Other Settings when Opening a Connection</a><br />
<a href="#custom_access_mode">
    Custom File Access Mode</a><br />
<a href="#multiple_connections">
    Multiple Connections</a><br />
<a href="#database_file_layout">
    Database File Layout</a><br />
<a href="#logging_recovery">
    Logging and Recovery</a><br />
<a href="#compatibility">
    Compatibility</a><br />
<a href="#auto_reconnect">
    Auto-Reconnect</a><br />
<a href="#auto_mixed_mode">
    Automatic Mixed Mode</a><br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
62 63
<a href="#page_size">
    Page Size</a><br />
64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77
<a href="#trace_options">
    Using the Trace Options</a><br />
<a href="#other_logging">
    Using Other Logging APIs</a><br />
<a href="#read_only">
    Read Only Databases</a><br />
<a href="#database_in_zip">
    Read Only Databases in Zip or Jar File</a><br />
<a href="#computed_columns">
    Computed Columns / Function Based Index</a><br />
<a href="#multi_dimensional">
    Multi-Dimensional Indexes</a><br />
<a href="#user_defined_functions">
    User-Defined Functions and Stored Procedures</a><br />
78 79
<a href="#pluggable_tables">
    Pluggable or User-Defined Tables</a><br />
80 81 82 83 84 85 86
<a href="#triggers">
    Triggers</a><br />
<a href="#compacting">
    Compacting a Database</a><br />
<a href="#cache_settings">
    Cache Settings</a><br />

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
87
<h2 id="feature_list">Feature List</h2>
88 89 90
<h3>Main Features</h3>
<ul>
<li>Very fast database engine
91
</li><li>Open source
92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102
</li><li>Written in Java
</li><li>Supports standard SQL, JDBC API
</li><li>Embedded and Server mode, Clustering support
</li><li>Strong security features
</li><li>The PostgreSQL ODBC driver can be used
</li><li>Multi version concurrency
</li></ul>

<h3>Additional Features</h3>
<ul>
<li>Disk based or in-memory databases and tables, read-only database support, temporary tables
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
103
</li><li>Transaction support (read committed), 2-phase-commit
104 105
</li><li>Multiple connections, table level locking
</li><li>Cost based optimizer, using a genetic algorithm for complex queries, zero-administration
106 107
</li><li>Scrollable and updatable result set support, large result set, external result sorting,
    functions can return a result set
108
</li><li>Encrypted database (AES), SHA-256 password encryption, encryption functions, SSL
109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119
</li></ul>

<h3>SQL Support</h3>
<ul>
<li>Support for multiple schemas, information schema
</li><li>Referential integrity / foreign key constraints with cascade, check constraints
</li><li>Inner and outer joins, subqueries, read only views and inline views
</li><li>Triggers and Java functions / stored procedures
</li><li>Many built-in functions, including XML and lossless data compression
</li><li>Wide range of data types including large objects (BLOB/CLOB) and arrays
</li><li>Sequence and autoincrement columns, computed columns (can be used for function based indexes)
120
</li><li><code>ORDER BY, GROUP BY, HAVING, UNION, LIMIT, TOP</code>
121 122
</li><li>Collation support, including support for the ICU4J library
</li><li>Support for users and roles
123 124
</li><li>Compatibility modes for IBM DB2, Apache Derby, HSQLDB,
    MS SQL Server, MySQL, Oracle, and PostgreSQL.
125 126 127 128 129
</li></ul>

<h3>Security Features</h3>
<ul>
<li>Includes a solution for the SQL injection problem
130
</li><li>User password authentication uses SHA-256 and salt
131 132 133 134
</li><li>For server mode connections, user passwords are never transmitted in plain text over the network
    (even when using insecure connections; this only applies to the TCP server and not to the H2 Console however;
    it also doesn't apply if you set the password in the database URL)
</li><li>All database files (including script files that can be used to backup data) can be
135
encrypted using the AES-128 encryption algorithm
136 137
</li><li>The remote JDBC driver supports TCP/IP connections over TLS
</li><li>The built-in web server supports connections over TLS
138 139 140 141 142
</li><li>Passwords can be sent to the database using char arrays instead of Strings
</li></ul>

<h3>Other Features and Tools</h3>
<ul>
143
<li>Small footprint (smaller than 1.5 MB), low memory requirements
144 145 146 147
</li><li>Multiple index types (b-tree, tree, hash)
</li><li>Support for multi-dimensional indexes
</li><li>CSV (comma separated values) file support
</li><li>Support for linked tables, and a built-in virtual 'range' table
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
148
</li><li>Supports the <code>EXPLAIN PLAN</code> statement; sophisticated trace options
149
</li><li>Database closing can be delayed or disabled to improve the performance
150
</li><li>Web-based Console application (translated to many languages) with autocomplete
151
</li><li>The database can generate SQL script files
152
</li><li>Contains a recovery tool that can dump the contents of the database
153 154
</li><li>Support for variables (for example to calculate running totals)
</li><li>Automatic re-compilation of prepared statements
155
</li><li>Uses a small number of database files
156 157 158 159
</li><li>Uses a checksum for each record and log entry for data integrity
</li><li>Well tested (high code coverage, randomized stress tests)
</li></ul>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
160
<h2 id="comparison">Comparison to Other Database Engines</h2>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
161 162 163 164 165
<p>
This comparison is based on
H2 1.3,
<a href="http://db.apache.org/derby">Apache Derby version 10.8</a>,
<a href="http://hsqldb.org">HSQLDB 2.2</a>,
166 167
<a href="https://www.mysql.com/">MySQL 5.5</a>,
<a href="https://www.postgresql.org/">PostgreSQL 9.0</a>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
168
</p>
169 170
<table class="main">
<tr>
171 172
<th>Feature</th>
<th>H2</th>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
173 174 175 176
<th>Derby</th>
<th>HSQLDB</th>
<th>MySQL</th>
<th>PostgreSQL</th>
177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193
</tr><tr>
<td>Pure Java</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Embedded Mode (Java)</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>In-Memory Mode</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
194
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
195 196 197 198 199
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
</tr><tr>
</tr><tr>
200 201
<td>Explain Plan</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
202
<td class="compareY">Yes *12</td>
203 204 205 206
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
207 208
<td>Built-in Clustering / Replication</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
209 210 211 212 213 214 215
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Encrypted Database</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
216 217
<td class="compareY">Yes *10</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes *10</td>
218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Linked Tables</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareY">Partially *1</td>
<td class="compareY">Partially *2</td>
thomasmueller's avatar
thomasmueller committed
226
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236
</tr><tr>
<td>ODBC Driver</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Fulltext Search</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
thomasmueller's avatar
thomasmueller committed
237
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
238 239 240 241
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
242
<td>Domains (User-Defined Types)</td>
243 244
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
245
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Files per Database</td>
<td class="compareY">Few</td>
<td class="compareN">Many</td>
<td class="compareY">Few</td>
<td class="compareN">Many</td>
<td class="compareN">Many</td>
</tr><tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
256 257
<td>Row Level Locking</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes *9</td>
258
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
259
<td class="compareY">Yes *9</td>
260 261 262
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
263
<td>Multi Version Concurrency</td>
264 265 266 267
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
268
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
269
</tr><tr>
270
<td>Multi-Threaded Processing</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
271 272
<td class="compareN">No *11</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
273
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
274
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Role Based Security</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes *3</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Updatable Result Sets</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes *7</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
287
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
288 289 290 291 292
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Sequences</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
293
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
294 295 296 297 298 299
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Limit and Offset</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
300
<td class="compareY">Yes *13</td>
301 302 303 304
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
305 306 307 308 309
<td>Window Functions</td>
<td class="compareN">No *15</td>
<td class="compareN">No *15</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
310
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
311
</tr><tr>
312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320
<td>Temporary Tables</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes *4</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Information Schema</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
321
<td class="compareN">No *8</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
322
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
323 324 325 326 327
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Computed Columns</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
328 329
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
thomasmueller's avatar
thomasmueller committed
330
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
331 332 333 334
<td class="compareY">Yes *6</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Case Insensitive Columns</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
335
<td class="compareY">Yes *14</td>
336 337 338 339 340 341 342
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes *6</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>Custom Aggregate Functions</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
343
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
thomasmueller's avatar
thomasmueller committed
344
<td class="compareN">No</td>
345 346
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
</tr><tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
347 348 349 350 351
<td>CLOB/BLOB Compression</td>
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
<td class="compareN">No</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
352
<td class="compareY">Yes</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
353
</tr><tr>
354
<td>Footprint (jar/dll size)</td>
355 356 357
<td>~1.5 MB *5</td>
<td>~3 MB</td>
<td>~1.5 MB</td>
358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369
<td>~4 MB</td>
<td>~6 MB</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
*1 HSQLDB supports text tables.<br />
*2 MySQL supports linked MySQL tables under the name 'federated tables'.<br />
*3 Derby support for roles based security and password checking as an option.<br />
*4 Derby only supports global temporary tables.<br />
*5 The default H2 jar file contains debug information, jar files for other databases do not.<br />
*6 PostgreSQL supports functional indexes.<br />
*7 Derby only supports updatable result sets if the query is not sorted.<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
370
*8 Derby doesn't support standard compliant information schema tables.<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
371
*9 When using MVCC (multi version concurrency).<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
372
*10 Derby and HSQLDB
373
    <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_cipher_mode_of_operation#Electronic_Codebook_(ECB)">don't hide data patterns well</a>.<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
374
*11 The MULTI_THREADED option is not enabled by default, and with version 1.3.x not supported when using MVCC.<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
375 376 377
*12 Derby doesn't support the <code>EXPLAIN</code> statement, but it supports runtime statistics and retrieving statement execution plans.<br />
*13 Derby doesn't support the syntax <code>LIMIT .. [OFFSET ..]</code>, however it supports <code>FETCH FIRST .. ROW[S] ONLY</code>.<br />
*14 Using collations.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
378
*15 Derby and H2 support <code>ROW_NUMBER() OVER()</code>.
379 380
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
381
<h2 id="products_work_with">H2 in Use</h2>
382 383
<p>
For a list of applications that work with or use H2, see:
384
<a href="http://www.h2database.com/html/links.html">Links</a>.
385 386
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
387
<h2 id="connection_modes">Connection Modes</h2>
388 389 390 391 392
<p>
The following connection modes are supported:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Embedded mode (local connections using JDBC)
393
</li><li>Server mode (remote connections using JDBC or ODBC over TCP/IP)
394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405
</li><li>Mixed mode (local and remote connections at the same time)
</li></ul>

<h3>Embedded Mode</h3>
<p>
In embedded mode, an application opens a database from within the same JVM using JDBC.
This is the fastest and easiest connection mode.
The disadvantage is that a database may only be open in one virtual machine (and class loader) at any time.
As in all modes, both persistent and in-memory databases are supported.
There is no limit on the number of database open concurrently,
or on the number of open connections.
</p>
406 407
<img src="images/connection-mode-embedded-2.png"
    width="208" height="259"
408 409
    alt="The database is embedded in the application" />

410
<h3>Server Mode</h3>
411
<p>
412
When using the server mode (sometimes called remote mode or client/server mode),
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
413
an application opens a database remotely using the JDBC or ODBC API.
414 415 416 417 418 419
A server needs to be started within the same or another virtual machine, or on another computer.
Many applications can connect to the same database at the same time, by connecting to this server.
Internally, the server process opens the database(s) in embedded mode.
</p>
<p>
The server mode is slower than the embedded mode, because all data is transferred over TCP/IP.
420
As in all modes, both persistent and in-memory databases are supported.
421
There is no limit on the number of database open concurrently per server,
422 423
or on the number of open connections.
</p>
424 425
<img src="images/connection-mode-remote-2.png"
    width="376" height="218"
426 427 428 429
    alt="The database is running in a server; the application connects to the server" />

<h3>Mixed Mode</h3>
<p>
430
The mixed mode is a combination of the embedded and the server mode.
431 432
The first application that connects to a database does that in embedded mode, but also starts
a server so that other applications (running in different processes or virtual machines) can
433
concurrently access the same data. The local connections are as fast as if
434
the database is used in just the embedded mode, while the remote
435 436
connections are a bit slower.
</p><p>
437
The server can be started and stopped from within the application (using the server API),
438 439 440
or automatically (automatic mixed mode). When using the <a href="#auto_mixed_mode">automatic mixed mode</a>,
all clients that want to connect to the database (no matter if
it's an local or remote connection) can do so using the exact same database URL.
441
</p>
442 443
<img src="images/connection-mode-mixed-2.png"
    width="403" height="240"
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
444
    alt="Database, server, and application run in one JVM; an application connects" />
445

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
446
<h2 id="database_url">Database URL Overview</h2>
447 448 449 450
<p>
This database supports multiple connection modes and connection settings.
This is achieved using different database URLs. Settings in the URLs are not case sensitive.
</p>
451 452
<table class="main">
<tr><th>Topic</th><th>URL Format and Examples</th></tr>
453
<tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
454
    <td><a href="#embedded_databases">Embedded (local) connection</a></td>
455
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
456 457 458 459 460
        jdbc:h2:[file:][&lt;path&gt;]&lt;databaseName&gt;<br />
        jdbc:h2:~/test<br />
        jdbc:h2:file:/data/sample<br />
        jdbc:h2:file:C:/data/sample (Windows only)<br />
    </td>
461 462
</tr>
<tr>
463
    <td><a href="#in_memory_databases">In-memory (private)</a></td>
464
    <td class="notranslate">jdbc:h2:mem:</td>
465 466
</tr>
<tr>
467
    <td><a href="#in_memory_databases">In-memory (named)</a></td>
468
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
469 470 471
        jdbc:h2:mem:&lt;databaseName&gt;<br />
        jdbc:h2:mem:test_mem
    </td>
472 473
</tr>
<tr>
474
    <td><a href="tutorial.html#using_server">Server mode (remote connections)<br /> using TCP/IP</a></td>
475
    <td class="notranslate">
476
        jdbc:h2:tcp://&lt;server&gt;[:&lt;port&gt;]/[&lt;path&gt;]&lt;databaseName&gt;<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
477
        jdbc:h2:tcp://localhost/~/test<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
478
        jdbc:h2:tcp://dbserv:8084/~/sample<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
479
        jdbc:h2:tcp://localhost/mem:test<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
480
    </td>
481 482
</tr>
<tr>
483
    <td><a href="advanced.html#tls_connections">Server mode (remote connections)<br /> using TLS</a></td>
484
    <td class="notranslate">
485
        jdbc:h2:ssl://&lt;server&gt;[:&lt;port&gt;]/[&lt;path&gt;]&lt;databaseName&gt;<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
486
        jdbc:h2:ssl://localhost:8085/~/sample;
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
487
    </td>
488 489
</tr>
<tr>
490
    <td><a href="#file_encryption">Using encrypted files</a></td>
491
    <td class="notranslate">
492
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;CIPHER=AES<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
493
        jdbc:h2:ssl://localhost/~/test;CIPHER=AES<br />
494
        jdbc:h2:file:~/secure;CIPHER=AES<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
495
    </td>
496 497
</tr>
<tr>
498
    <td><a href="#database_file_locking">File locking methods</a></td>
499
    <td class="notranslate">
500
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;FILE_LOCK={FILE|SOCKET|NO}<br />
501
        jdbc:h2:file:~/private;CIPHER=AES;FILE_LOCK=SOCKET<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
502
    </td>
503 504
</tr>
<tr>
505
    <td><a href="#database_only_if_exists">Only open if it already exists</a></td>
506
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
507 508 509
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;IFEXISTS=TRUE<br />
        jdbc:h2:file:~/sample;IFEXISTS=TRUE<br />
    </td>
510 511
</tr>
<tr>
512
    <td><a href="#do_not_close_on_exit">Don't close the database when the VM exits</a></td>
513
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
514
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
515 516
    </td>
</tr>
517 518 519 520
<tr>
    <td><a href="#execute_sql_on_connection">Execute SQL on connection</a></td>
    <td class="notranslate">
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;INIT=RUNSCRIPT FROM '~/create.sql'<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
521
        jdbc:h2:file:~/sample;INIT=RUNSCRIPT FROM '~/create.sql'\;RUNSCRIPT FROM '~/populate.sql'<br />
522 523
    </td>
</tr>
524
<tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
525
    <td><a href="advanced.html#passwords">User name and/or password</a></td>
526
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
527 528 529
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;[;USER=&lt;username&gt;][;PASSWORD=&lt;value&gt;]<br />
        jdbc:h2:file:~/sample;USER=sa;PASSWORD=123<br />
    </td>
530 531
</tr>
<tr>
532
    <td><a href="#trace_options">Debug trace settings</a></td>
533
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
534 535 536
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;TRACE_LEVEL_FILE=&lt;level 0..3&gt;<br />
        jdbc:h2:file:~/sample;TRACE_LEVEL_FILE=3<br />
    </td>
537 538
</tr>
<tr>
539
    <td><a href="#ignore_unknown_settings">Ignore unknown settings</a></td>
540
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
541 542
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;IGNORE_UNKNOWN_SETTINGS=TRUE<br />
    </td>
543 544
</tr>
<tr>
545
    <td><a href="#custom_access_mode">Custom file access mode</a></td>
546
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
547
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;ACCESS_MODE_DATA=rws<br />
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
548
    </td>
549 550
</tr>
<tr>
551
    <td><a href="#database_in_zip">Database in a zip file</a></td>
552
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
553 554 555
        jdbc:h2:zip:&lt;zipFileName&gt;!/&lt;databaseName&gt;<br />
        jdbc:h2:zip:~/db.zip!/test
    </td>
556 557
</tr>
<tr>
558
    <td><a href="#compatibility">Compatibility mode</a></td>
559
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
560 561 562
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;MODE=&lt;databaseType&gt;<br />
        jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=MYSQL
    </td>
563 564
</tr>
<tr>
565
    <td><a href="#auto_reconnect">Auto-reconnect</a></td>
566
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
567 568 569
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;AUTO_RECONNECT=TRUE<br />
        jdbc:h2:tcp://localhost/~/test;AUTO_RECONNECT=TRUE
    </td>
570 571
</tr>
<tr>
572
    <td><a href="#auto_mixed_mode">Automatic mixed mode</a></td>
573
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
574 575 576
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE<br />
        jdbc:h2:~/test;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE
    </td>
577
</tr>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
578 579 580 581 582 583
<tr>
    <td><a href="#page_size">Page size</a></td>
    <td class="notranslate">
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;PAGE_SIZE=512<br />
    </td>
</tr>
584
<tr>
585
    <td><a href="#other_settings">Changing other settings</a></td>
586
    <td class="notranslate">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
587 588 589
        jdbc:h2:&lt;url&gt;;&lt;setting&gt;=&lt;value&gt;[;&lt;setting&gt;=&lt;value&gt;...]<br />
        jdbc:h2:file:~/sample;TRACE_LEVEL_SYSTEM_OUT=3<br />
    </td>
590 591 592
</tr>
</table>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
593
<h2 id="embedded_databases">Connecting to an Embedded (Local) Database</h2>
594
<p>
595
The database URL for connecting to a local database is
596 597
<code>jdbc:h2:[file:][&lt;path&gt;]&lt;databaseName&gt;</code>.
The prefix <code>file:</code> is optional. If no or only a relative path is used, then the current working
598 599
directory is used as a starting point. The case sensitivity of the path and database name depend on the
operating system, however it is recommended to use lowercase letters only.
600
The database name must be at least three characters long
601
(a limitation of <code>File.createTempFile</code>).
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
602
The database name must not contain a semicolon.
603
To point to the user home directory, use <code>~/</code>, as in: <code>jdbc:h2:~/test</code>.
604 605
</p>

606
<h2 id="in_memory_databases">In-Memory Databases</h2>
607 608
<p>
For certain use cases (for example: rapid prototyping, testing, high performance
609
operations, read-only databases), it may not be required to persist data, or persist changes to the data.
610
This database supports the in-memory mode, where the data is not persisted.
611
</p><p>
612
In some cases, only one connection to a in-memory database is required.
613
This means the database to be opened is private. In this case, the database URL is
614
<code>jdbc:h2:mem:</code> Opening two connections within the same virtual machine
615 616
means opening two different (private) databases.
</p><p>
617
Sometimes multiple connections to the same in-memory database are required.
618
In this case, the database URL must include a name. Example: <code>jdbc:h2:mem:db1</code>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
619
Accessing the same database using this URL only works within the same virtual machine and
620 621
class loader environment.
</p><p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
622 623
To access an in-memory database from another process or from another computer,
you need to start a TCP server in the same process as the in-memory database was created.
624
The other processes then need to access the database over TCP/IP or TLS,
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
625
using a database URL such as: <code>jdbc:h2:tcp://localhost/mem:db1</code>.
626
</p><p>
627 628
By default, closing the last connection to a database closes the database.
For an in-memory database, this means the content is lost.
629
To keep the database open, add <code>;DB_CLOSE_DELAY=-1</code> to the database URL.
630
To keep the content of an in-memory database as long as the virtual machine is alive, use
631
<code>jdbc:h2:mem:test;DB_CLOSE_DELAY=-1</code>.
632 633
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
634
<h2 id="file_encryption">Database Files Encryption</h2>
635
<p>
636
The database files can be encrypted.
Thomas Mueller Graf's avatar
Thomas Mueller Graf committed
637
Three encryption algorithms are supported:
638 639 640 641 642
<ul>
<li>"AES" - also known as Rijndael, only AES-128 is implemented.</li>
<li>"XTEA" - the 32 round version.</li>
<li>"FOG" - pseudo-encryption only useful for hiding data from a text editor.</li>
</ul>
643 644 645 646 647 648
To use file encryption, you need to specify the encryption algorithm (the 'cipher')
and the file password (in addition to the user password) when connecting to the database.
</p>

<h3>Creating a New Database with File Encryption</h3>
<p>
649
By default, a new database is automatically created if it does not exist yet.
650 651 652 653 654 655
To create an encrypted database, connect to it as it would already exist.
</p>

<h3>Connecting to an Encrypted Database</h3>
<p>
The encryption algorithm is set in the database URL, and the file password is specified in the password field,
656
before the user password. A single space separates the file password
657
and the user password; the file password itself may not contain spaces. File passwords
658
and user passwords are case sensitive. Here is an example to connect to a
659 660
password-encrypted database:
</p>
661
<pre>
662 663 664 665 666 667 668
String url = "jdbc:h2:~/test;CIPHER=AES";
String user = "sa";
String pwds = "filepwd userpwd";
conn = DriverManager.
    getConnection(url, user, pwds);
</pre>

669 670
<h3>Encrypting or Decrypting a Database</h3>
<p>
671
To encrypt an existing database, use the <code>ChangeFileEncryption</code> tool.
672
This tool can also decrypt an encrypted database, or change the file encryption key.
673 674 675
The tool is available from within the H2 Console in the tools section, or you can run it from the command line.
The following command line will encrypt the database <code>test</code> in the user home directory
with the file password <code>filepwd</code> and the encryption algorithm AES:
676
</p>
677
<pre>
678 679 680
java -cp h2*.jar org.h2.tools.ChangeFileEncryption -dir ~ -db test -cipher AES -encrypt filepwd
</pre>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
681
<h2 id="database_file_locking">Database File Locking</h2>
682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689
<p>
Whenever a database is opened, a lock file is created to signal other processes
that the database is in use. If database is closed, or if the process that opened
the database terminates, this lock file is deleted.
</p><p>
The following file locking methods are implemented:
</p>
<ul>
690
<li>The default method is <code>FILE</code> and uses a watchdog thread to
691
protect the database file. The watchdog reads the lock file each second.
692 693 694 695
</li><li>The second method is <code>SOCKET</code> and opens a server socket.
The socket method does not require reading the lock file every second.
The socket method should only be used if the database files
are only accessed by one (and always the same) computer.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
696 697
</li><li>The third method is <code>FS</code>.
This will use native file locking using <code>FileChannel.lock</code>.
698 699
</li><li>It is also possible to open the database without file locking;
in this case it is up to the application to protect the database files.
700 701 702 703
Failing to do so will result in a corrupted database.
Using the method <code>NO</code> forces the database to not create a lock file at all.
Please note that this is unsafe as another process is able to open the same database,
possibly leading to data corruption.</li></ul>
704
<p>
705
To open the database with a different file locking method, use the parameter
706
<code>FILE_LOCK</code>.
707 708
The following code opens the database with the 'socket' locking method:
</p>
709
<pre>
710 711 712
String url = "jdbc:h2:~/test;FILE_LOCK=SOCKET";
</pre>
<p>
713 714
For more information about the algorithms, see
<a href="advanced.html#file_locking_protocols">Advanced / File Locking Protocols</a>.
715 716
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
717
<h2 id="database_only_if_exists">Opening a Database Only if it Already Exists</h2>
718
<p>
719
By default, when an application calls <code>DriverManager.getConnection(url, ...)</code>
720
and the database specified in the URL does not yet exist, a new (empty) database is created.
721
In some situations, it is better to restrict creating new databases, and only allow to open
722
existing databases. To do this, add <code>;IFEXISTS=TRUE</code>
723
to the database URL. In this case, if the database does not already exist, an exception is thrown when
724 725 726
trying to connect. The connection only succeeds when the database already exists.
The complete URL may look like this:
</p>
727
<pre>
728 729 730
String url = "jdbc:h2:/data/sample;IFEXISTS=TRUE";
</pre>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
731
<h2 id="closing_a_database">Closing a Database</h2>
732 733 734

<h3>Delayed Database Closing</h3>
<p>
735 736 737
Usually, a database is closed when the last connection to it is closed. In some situations
this slows down the application, for example when it is not possible to keep at least one connection open.
The automatic closing of a database can be delayed or disabled with the SQL statement
738
<code>SET DB_CLOSE_DELAY &lt;seconds&gt;</code>.
739
The parameter &lt;seconds&gt; specifies the number of seconds to keep
740 741
a database open after the last connection to it was closed. The following statement
will keep a database open for 10 seconds after the last connection was closed:
742
</p>
743
<pre>
744 745 746
SET DB_CLOSE_DELAY 10
</pre>
<p>
747
The value -1 means the database is not closed automatically.
748 749
The value 0 is the default and means the database is closed when the last connection is closed.
This setting is persistent and can be set by an administrator only.
750
It is possible to set the value in the database URL: <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;DB_CLOSE_DELAY=10</code>.
751 752
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
753
<h3 id="do_not_close_on_exit">Don't Close a Database when the VM Exits</h3>
754 755
<p>
By default, a database is closed when the last connection is closed. However, if it is never closed,
756
the database is closed when the virtual machine exits normally, using a shutdown hook.
757 758 759 760 761 762 763
In some situations, the database should not be closed in this case, for example because the
database is still used at virtual machine shutdown (to store the shutdown process in the database for example).
For those cases, the automatic closing of the database can be disabled in the database URL.
The first connection (the one that is opening the database) needs to
set the option in the database URL (it is not possible to change the setting afterwards).
The database URL to disable database closing on exit is:
</p>
764
<pre>
765 766 767
String url = "jdbc:h2:~/test;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE";
</pre>

768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775
<h2 id="execute_sql_on_connection">Execute SQL on Connection</h2>
<p>
Sometimes, particularly for in-memory databases, it is useful to be able to execute DDL or DML
commands automatically when a client connects to a database. This functionality is enabled via
the INIT property. Note that multiple commands may be passed to INIT, but the semicolon delimiter
must be escaped, as in the example below.
</p>
<pre>
776
String url = "jdbc:h2:mem:test;INIT=runscript from '~/create.sql'\\;runscript from '~/init.sql'";
777
</pre>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
778 779 780 781 782
<p>
Please note the double backslash is only required in a Java or properties file.
In a GUI, or in an XML file, only one backslash is required:
</p>
<pre>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
783
&lt;property name="url" value=
784
"jdbc:h2:mem:test;INIT=create schema if not exists test\;runscript from '~/sql/init.sql'"
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
785
/&gt;
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
786
</pre>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
787
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
788 789 790
Backslashes within the init script (for example within a runscript statement, to specify the folder names in Windows)
need to be escaped as well (using a second backslash). It might be simpler to avoid backslashes in folder names for this reason;
use forward slashes instead.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
791
</p>
792

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
793
<h2 id="ignore_unknown_settings">Ignore Unknown Settings</h2>
794 795 796
<p>
Some applications (for example OpenOffice.org Base) pass some additional parameters
when connecting to the database. Why those parameters are passed is unknown.
797 798
The parameters <code>PREFERDOSLIKELINEENDS</code> and
<code>IGNOREDRIVERPRIVILEGES</code> are such examples;
799 800 801
they are simply ignored to improve the compatibility with OpenOffice.org. If an application
passes other parameters when connecting to the database, usually the database throws an exception
saying the parameter is not supported. It is possible to ignored such parameters by adding
802
<code>;IGNORE_UNKNOWN_SETTINGS=TRUE</code> to the database URL.
803 804
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
805
<h2 id="other_settings">Changing Other Settings when Opening a Connection</h2>
806
<p>
807
In addition to the settings already described,
808
other database settings can be passed in the database URL.
809 810
Adding <code>;setting=value</code> at the end of a database URL is the
same as executing the statement <code>SET setting value</code> just after
811
connecting. For a list of supported settings, see <a href="grammar.html">SQL Grammar</a>
812
or the <a href="http://www.h2database.com/javadoc/org/h2/engine/DbSettings.html">DbSettings</a> javadoc.
813 814
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
815
<h2 id="custom_access_mode">Custom File Access Mode</h2>
816
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
817 818 819 820
Usually, the database opens the database file with the access mode
<code>rw</code>, meaning read-write (except for read only databases,
where the mode <code>r</code> is used).
To open a database in read-only mode if the database file is not read-only, use
821 822
<code>ACCESS_MODE_DATA=r</code>.
Also supported are <code>rws</code> and <code>rwd</code>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
823
This setting must be specified in the database URL:
824
</p>
825
<pre>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
826
String url = "jdbc:h2:~/test;ACCESS_MODE_DATA=rws";
827 828 829
</pre>
<p>
For more information see <a href="advanced.html#durability_problems">Durability Problems</a>.
830
On many operating systems the access mode <code>rws</code> does not guarantee that the data is written to the disk.
831 832
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
833
<h2 id="multiple_connections">Multiple Connections</h2>
834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845

<h3>Opening Multiple Databases at the Same Time</h3>
<p>
An application can open multiple databases at the same time, including multiple
connections to the same database. The number of open database is only limited by the memory available.
</p>

<h3>Multiple Connections to the Same Database: Client/Server</h3>
<p>
If you want to access the same database at the same time from different processes or computers,
you need to use the client / server mode. In this case, one process acts as the server, and the
other processes (that could reside on other computers as well) connect to the server via TCP/IP
846
(or TLS over TCP/IP for improved security).
847 848 849 850
</p>

<h3>Multithreading Support</h3>
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
851 852 853 854 855
This database is multithreading-safe.
If an application is multi-threaded, it does not need to worry about synchronizing access to the database.
An application should normally use one connection per thread.
This database synchronizes access to the same connection, but other databases may not do this.
To get higher concurrency, you need to use multiple connections.
856
</p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
857
<p>
858
By default, requests to the same database are synchronized.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
859 860 861
That means an application can use multiple threads that access the same database
at the same time, however if one thread executes a long running query, the other threads need to wait.
To enable concurrent database usage, see the setting <code>MULTI_THREADED</code>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
862
</p>
863 864 865

<h3>Locking, Lock-Timeout, Deadlocks</h3>
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
866 867 868 869
Please note MVCC is enabled in version 1.4.x by default, when using the MVStore.
In this case, table level locking is not used.

If <a href="advanced.html#mvcc">multi-version concurrency</a> is not used,
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
870
the database uses table level locks to give each connection a consistent state of the data.
871
There are two kinds of locks: read locks (shared locks) and write locks (exclusive locks).
872 873 874
All locks are released when the transaction commits or rolls back.
When using the default transaction isolation level 'read committed', read locks are already released after each statement.
</p><p>
875 876
If a connection wants to reads from a table, and there is no write lock on the table,
then a read lock is added to the table. If there is a write lock, then this connection waits
877
for the other connection to release the lock. If a connection cannot get a lock for a specified time,
878 879
then a lock timeout exception is thrown.
</p><p>
880
Usually, <code>SELECT</code> statements will generate read locks. This includes subqueries.
881
Statements that modify data use write locks. It is also possible to lock a table exclusively without modifying data,
882 883 884 885 886
using the statement <code>SELECT ... FOR UPDATE</code>.
The statements <code>COMMIT</code> and
<code>ROLLBACK</code> releases all open locks.
The commands <code>SAVEPOINT</code> and
<code>ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT</code> don't affect locks.
887 888
The locks are also released when the autocommit mode changes, and for connections with
autocommit set to true (this is the default), locks are released after each statement.
889
The following statements generate locks:
890
</p>
891
<table class="main">
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
892 893 894 895 896 897
    <tr>
        <th>Type of Lock</th>
        <th>SQL Statement</th>
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Read</td>
898
        <td class="notranslate">SELECT * FROM TEST;<br />
899 900
        CALL SELECT MAX(ID) FROM TEST;<br />
        SCRIPT;</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
901 902 903
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Write</td>
904
        <td class="notranslate">SELECT * FROM TEST WHERE 1=0 FOR UPDATE;</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
905 906 907
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Write</td>
908
        <td class="notranslate">INSERT INTO TEST VALUES(1, 'Hello');<br />
909 910 911
        INSERT INTO TEST SELECT * FROM TEST;<br />
        UPDATE TEST SET NAME='Hi';<br />
        DELETE FROM TEST;</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
912 913 914
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Write</td>
915
        <td class="notranslate">ALTER TABLE TEST ...;<br />
916 917
        CREATE INDEX ... ON TEST ...;<br />
        DROP INDEX ...;</td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
918
    </tr>
919 920 921
</table>
<p>
The number of seconds until a lock timeout exception is thrown can be
922
set separately for each connection using the SQL command
923
<code>SET LOCK_TIMEOUT &lt;milliseconds&gt;</code>.
924
The initial lock timeout (that is the timeout used for new connections) can be set using the SQL command
925
<code>SET DEFAULT_LOCK_TIMEOUT &lt;milliseconds&gt;</code>. The default lock timeout is persistent.
926 927
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
928 929 930 931 932 933 934
<h3>Avoiding Deadlocks</h3>
<p>
To avoid deadlocks, ensure that all transactions lock the tables in the same order
(for example in alphabetical order), and avoid upgrading read locks to write locks.
Both can be achieved using explicitly locking tables using <code>SELECT ... FOR UPDATE</code>.
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
935
<h2 id="database_file_layout">Database File Layout</h2>
936
<p>
937
The following files are created for persistent databases:
938
</p>
939 940
<table class="main">
<tr><th>File Name</th><th>Description</th><th>Number of Files</th></tr>
941 942 943
<tr><td class="notranslate">
    test.h2.db
</td><td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
944
    Database file.<br />
945
    Contains the transaction log, indexes, and data for all tables.<br />
946
    Format: <code>&lt;database&gt;.h2.db</code>
947 948 949 950
</td><td>
    1 per database
</td></tr>
<tr><td class="notranslate">
951 952
    test.lock.db
</td><td>
953
    Database lock file.<br />
954
    Automatically (re-)created while the database is in use.<br />
955
    Format: <code>&lt;database&gt;.lock.db</code>
956
</td><td>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
957
    1 per database (only if in use)
958
</td></tr>
959
<tr><td class="notranslate">
960 961
    test.trace.db
</td><td>
962
    Trace file (if the trace option is enabled).<br />
963
    Contains trace information.<br />
964
    Format: <code>&lt;database&gt;.trace.db</code><br />
965
    Renamed to <code>&lt;database&gt;.trace.db.old</code> is too big.
966
</td><td>
967
    0 or 1 per database
968
</td></tr>
969
<tr><td class="notranslate">
970
    test.lobs.db/*
971
</td><td>
972 973
    Directory containing one file for each<br />
    BLOB or CLOB value larger than a certain size.<br />
974
    Format: <code>&lt;id&gt;.t&lt;tableId&gt;.lob.db</code>
975
</td><td>
976
    1 per large object
977
</td></tr>
978
<tr><td class="notranslate">
979 980
    test.123.temp.db
</td><td>
981 982
    Temporary file.<br />
    Contains a temporary blob or a large result set.<br />
983
    Format: <code>&lt;database&gt;.&lt;id&gt;.temp.db</code>
984 985 986 987 988 989 990
</td><td>
    1 per object
</td></tr>
</table>

<h3>Moving and Renaming Database Files</h3>
<p>
991
Database name and location are not stored inside the database files.
992
</p><p>
993 994 995
While a database is closed, the files can be moved to another directory, and they can
be renamed as well (as long as all files of the same database start with the same
name and the respective extensions are unchanged).
996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002
</p><p>
As there is no platform specific data in the files, they can be moved to other operating systems
without problems.
</p>

<h3>Backup</h3>
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1003
When the database is closed, it is possible to backup the database files.
1004
</p><p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1005
To backup data while the database is running,
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1006
the SQL commands <code>SCRIPT</code> and <code>BACKUP</code> can be used.
1007 1008
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1009
<h2 id="logging_recovery">Logging and Recovery</h2>
1010
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1011 1012 1013 1014 1015
Whenever data is modified in the database and those changes are committed, the changes are written
to the transaction log (except for in-memory objects). The changes to the main data area itself are usually written
later on, to optimize disk access. If there is a power failure, the main data area is not up-to-date,
but because the changes are in the transaction log, the next time the database is opened, the changes
are re-applied automatically.
1016 1017
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1018
<h2 id="compatibility">Compatibility</h2>
1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025
<p>
All database engines behave a little bit different. Where possible, H2 supports the ANSI SQL standard,
and tries to be compatible to other databases. There are still a few differences however:
</p>
<p>
In MySQL text columns are case insensitive by default, while in H2 they are case sensitive. However
H2 supports case insensitive columns as well. To create the tables with case insensitive texts, append
1026 1027
<code>IGNORECASE=TRUE</code> to the database URL
(example: <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;IGNORECASE=TRUE</code>).
1028 1029 1030 1031 1032
</p>

<h3>Compatibility Modes</h3>
<p>
For certain features, this database can emulate the behavior of specific databases.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1033
However, only a small subset of the differences between databases are implemented in this way.
1034
Here is the list of currently supported modes and the differences to the regular mode:
1035 1036
</p>

1037
<h3>DB2 Compatibility Mode</h3>
1038
<p>
1039 1040
To use the IBM DB2 mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=DB2</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE DB2</code>.
1041
</p>
1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047
<ul><li>For aliased columns, <code>ResultSetMetaData.getColumnName()</code>
    returns the alias name and <code>getTableName()</code> returns
    <code>null</code>.
</li><li>Support for the syntax <code>[OFFSET .. ROW] [FETCH ... ONLY]</code>
    as an alternative for <code>LIMIT .. OFFSET</code>.
</li><li>Concatenating <code>NULL</code> with another value
1048
    results in the other value.
1049
</li><li>Support the pseudo-table SYSIBM.SYSDUMMY1.
1050
</li><li>Timestamps with dash between date and time are supported.
1051 1052
</li></ul>

1053
<h3>Derby Compatibility Mode</h3>
1054
<p>
1055 1056
To use the Apache Derby mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=Derby</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE Derby</code>.
1057
</p>
1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063
<ul><li>For aliased columns, <code>ResultSetMetaData.getColumnName()</code>
    returns the alias name and <code>getTableName()</code> returns
    <code>null</code>.
</li><li>For unique indexes, <code>NULL</code> is distinct.
    That means only one row with <code>NULL</code> in one of the columns is allowed.
</li><li>Concatenating <code>NULL</code> with another value
1064
    results in the other value.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1065
</li><li>Support the pseudo-table SYSIBM.SYSDUMMY1.
1066 1067 1068 1069
</li></ul>

<h3>HSQLDB Compatibility Mode</h3>
<p>
1070 1071
To use the HSQLDB mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=HSQLDB</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE HSQLDB</code>.
1072
</p>
1073 1074 1075
<ul><li>For aliased columns, <code>ResultSetMetaData.getColumnName()</code>
    returns the alias name and <code>getTableName()</code> returns
    <code>null</code>.
1076
</li><li>When converting the scale of decimal data, the number is only converted if the new scale is
1077
    smaller than the current scale. Usually, the scale is converted and 0s are added if required.
1078 1079
</li><li>For unique indexes, <code>NULL</code> is distinct.
    That means only one row with <code>NULL</code> in one of the columns is allowed.
1080
</li><li>Text can be concatenated using '+'.
1081 1082 1083 1084
</li></ul>

<h3>MS SQL Server Compatibility Mode</h3>
<p>
1085 1086
To use the MS SQL Server mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=MSSQLServer</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE MSSQLServer</code>.
1087
</p>
1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094
<ul><li>For aliased columns, <code>ResultSetMetaData.getColumnName()</code>
    returns the alias name and <code>getTableName()</code> returns
    <code>null</code>.
</li><li>Identifiers may be quoted using square brackets as in <code>[Test]</code>.
</li><li>For unique indexes, <code>NULL</code> is distinct.
    That means only one row with <code>NULL</code> in one of the columns is allowed.
</li><li>Concatenating <code>NULL</code> with another value
1095
    results in the other value.
1096
</li><li>Text can be concatenated using '+'.
1097 1098
</li></ul>

1099
<h3>MySQL Compatibility Mode</h3>
1100
<p>
1101
To use the MySQL mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=MySQL</code>
1102
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE MySQL</code>. Use this mode for compatibility with MariaDB too.
1103
</p>
1104 1105
<ul><li>When inserting data, if a column is defined to be <code>NOT NULL</code>
    and <code>NULL</code> is inserted,
1106 1107
    then a 0 (or empty string, or the current timestamp for timestamp columns) value is used.
    Usually, this operation is not allowed and an exception is thrown.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1108
</li><li>Creating indexes in the <code>CREATE TABLE</code> statement is allowed using
1109
    <code>INDEX(..)</code> or <code>KEY(..)</code>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1110
    Example: <code>create table test(id int primary key, name varchar(255), key idx_name(name));</code>
1111 1112 1113
</li><li>Meta data calls return identifiers in lower case.
</li><li>When converting a floating point number to an integer, the fractional
    digits are not truncated, but the value is rounded.
1114
</li><li>Concatenating <code>NULL</code> with another value
1115
    results in the other value.
1116 1117 1118
</li><li>ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE is supported in INSERT statements.
</li><li>INSERT IGNORE is partially supported and may be used to skip rows with duplicate keys if ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE is not specified.
</li><li>REGEXP_REPLACE() uses \ for back-references for compatibility with MariaDB.
1119
</li></ul>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1120 1121
<p>
Text comparison in MySQL is case insensitive by default, while in H2 it is case sensitive (as in most other databases).
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1122 1123
H2 does support case insensitive text comparison, but it needs to be set separately,
using <code>SET IGNORECASE TRUE</code>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1124 1125
This affects comparison using <code>=, LIKE, REGEXP</code>.
</p>
1126 1127 1128

<h3>Oracle Compatibility Mode</h3>
<p>
1129 1130
To use the Oracle mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=Oracle</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE Oracle</code>.
1131
</p>
1132 1133 1134 1135
<ul><li>For aliased columns, <code>ResultSetMetaData.getColumnName()</code>
    returns the alias name and <code>getTableName()</code> returns
    <code>null</code>.
</li><li>When using unique indexes, multiple rows with <code>NULL</code>
1136
    in all columns are allowed, however it is not allowed to have multiple rows with the
1137
    same values otherwise.
1138
</li><li>Concatenating <code>NULL</code> with another value
1139
    results in the other value.
1140
</li><li>Empty strings are treated like <code>NULL</code> values.
1141 1142
</li><li>REGEXP_REPLACE() uses \ for back-references.
</li><li>DATE data type is treated like TIMESTAMP data type.
1143 1144 1145 1146
</li></ul>

<h3>PostgreSQL Compatibility Mode</h3>
<p>
1147 1148
To use the PostgreSQL mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=PostgreSQL</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE PostgreSQL</code>.
1149
</p>
1150 1151 1152
<ul><li>For aliased columns, <code>ResultSetMetaData.getColumnName()</code>
    returns the alias name and <code>getTableName()</code> returns
    <code>null</code>.
1153 1154
</li><li>When converting a floating point number to an integer, the fractional
    digits are not be truncated, but the value is rounded.
1155 1156
</li><li>The system columns <code>CTID</code> and
    <code>OID</code> are supported.
1157
</li><li>LOG(x) is base 10 in this mode.
1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170
</li><li>REGEXP_REPLACE() uses \ for back-references.
</li><li>Fixed-width strings are padded with spaces.
</li></ul>

<h3>Ignite Compatibility Mode</h3>
<p>
To use the Ignite mode, use the database URL <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;MODE=Ignite</code>
or the SQL statement <code>SET MODE Ignite</code>.
</p>
<ul><li>Creating indexes in the <code>CREATE TABLE</code> statement is allowed using
    <code>INDEX(..)</code> or <code>KEY(..)</code>.
    Example: <code>create table test(id int primary key, name varchar(255), key idx_name(name));</code>
</li><li>AFFINITY KEY and SHARD KEY keywords may be used in index definition.
1171 1172
</li></ul>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1173
<h2 id="auto_reconnect">Auto-Reconnect</h2>
1174 1175 1176 1177
<p>
The auto-reconnect feature causes the JDBC driver to reconnect to
the database if the connection is lost. The automatic re-connect only
occurs when auto-commit is enabled; if auto-commit is disabled, an exception is thrown.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1178
To enable this mode, append <code>;AUTO_RECONNECT=TRUE</code> to the database URL.
1179 1180 1181 1182
</p>
<p>
Re-connecting will open a new session. After an automatic re-connect,
variables and local temporary tables definitions (excluding data) are re-created.
1183
The contents of the system table <code>INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SESSION_STATE</code>
1184 1185
contains all client side state that is re-created.
</p>
1186 1187 1188 1189
<p>
If another connection uses the database in exclusive mode (enabled using <code>SET EXCLUSIVE 1</code>
or <code>SET EXCLUSIVE 2</code>), then this connection will try to re-connect until the exclusive mode ends.
</p>
1190

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1191
<h2 id="auto_mixed_mode">Automatic Mixed Mode</h2>
1192
<p>
1193
Multiple processes can access the same database without having to start the server manually.
1194
To do that, append <code>;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE</code> to the database URL.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1195
You can use the same database URL independent of whether the database is already open or not.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1196
This feature doesn't work with in-memory databases. Example database URL:
1197
</p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1198 1199 1200
<pre>
jdbc:h2:/data/test;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE
</pre>
1201
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1202 1203 1204
Use the same URL for all connections to this database. Internally, when using this mode,
the first connection to the database is made in embedded mode, and additionally a server
is started internally (as a daemon thread). If the database is already open in another process,
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1205 1206
the server mode is used automatically. The IP address and port of the server are stored in the file
<code>.lock.db</code>, that's why in-memory databases can't be supported.
1207 1208 1209 1210
</p>
<p>
The application that opens the first connection to the database uses the embedded mode,
which is faster than the server mode. Therefore the main application should open
1211 1212
the database first if possible. The first connection automatically starts a server on a random port.
This server allows remote connections, however only to this database (to ensure that,
1213
the client reads <code>.lock.db</code> file and sends the the random key that is stored there to the server).
1214 1215 1216 1217
When the first connection is closed, the server stops. If other (remote) connections are still
open, one of them will then start a server (auto-reconnect is enabled automatically).
</p>
<p>
1218
All processes need to have access to the database files.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1219 1220
If the first connection is closed (the connection that started the server), open transactions of other connections will be rolled back
(this may not be a problem if you don't disable autocommit).
1221
Explicit client/server connections (using <code>jdbc:h2:tcp://</code> or <code>ssl://</code>) are not supported.
1222
This mode is not supported for in-memory databases.
1223
</p>
1224 1225
<p>
Here is an example how to use this mode. Application 1 and 2 are not necessarily started
1226
on the same computer, but they need to have access to the database files. Application 1
1227 1228
and 2 are typically two different processes (however they could run within the same process).
</p>
1229
<pre>
1230 1231 1232 1233 1234 1235
// Application 1:
DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:h2:/data/test;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE");

// Application 2:
DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:h2:/data/test;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE");
</pre>
1236
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1237 1238
When using this feature, by default the server uses any free TCP port.
The port can be set manually using <code>AUTO_SERVER_PORT=9090</code>.
1239
</p>
1240

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1241 1242
<h2 id="page_size">Page Size</h2>
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1243 1244
The page size for new databases is 2 KB (2048), unless the page size is set
explicitly in the database URL using <code>PAGE_SIZE=</code> when
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1245
the database is created. The page size of existing databases can not be changed,
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1246
so this property needs to be set when the database is created.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1247 1248
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1249
<h2 id="trace_options">Using the Trace Options</h2>
1250 1251 1252 1253 1254
<p>
To find problems in an application, it is sometimes good to see what database operations
where executed. This database offers the following trace features:
</p>
<ul>
1255 1256
<li>Trace to <code>System.out</code> and/or to a file
</li><li>Support for trace levels <code>OFF, ERROR, INFO, DEBUG</code>
1257
</li><li>The maximum size of the trace file can be set
1258
</li><li>It is possible to generate Java source code from the trace file
1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264
</li><li>Trace can be enabled at runtime by manually creating a file
</li></ul>

<h3>Trace Options</h3>
<p>
The simplest way to enable the trace option is setting it in the database URL.
1265 1266 1267
There are two settings, one for <code>System.out</code>
(<code>TRACE_LEVEL_SYSTEM_OUT</code>) tracing,
and one for file tracing (<code>TRACE_LEVEL_FILE</code>).
1268
The trace levels are
1269 1270 1271 1272 1273
0 for <code>OFF</code>,
1 for  <code>ERROR</code> (the default),
2 for <code>INFO</code>, and
3 for <code>DEBUG</code>.
A database URL with both levels set to <code>DEBUG</code> is:
1274
</p>
1275
<pre>
1276 1277 1278 1279
jdbc:h2:~/test;TRACE_LEVEL_FILE=3;TRACE_LEVEL_SYSTEM_OUT=3
</pre>
<p>
The trace level can be changed at runtime by executing the SQL command
1280 1281
<code>SET TRACE_LEVEL_SYSTEM_OUT level</code> (for <code>System.out</code> tracing)
or <code>SET TRACE_LEVEL_FILE level</code> (for file tracing).
1282 1283
Example:
</p>
1284
<pre>
1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290
SET TRACE_LEVEL_SYSTEM_OUT 3
</pre>

<h3>Setting the Maximum Size of the Trace File</h3>
<p>
When using a high trace level, the trace file can get very big quickly.
1291
The default size limit is 16 MB, if the trace file exceeds this limit, it is renamed to
1292
<code>.old</code> and a new file is created.
1293 1294
If another such file exists, it is deleted.
To limit the size to a certain number of megabytes, use
1295
<code>SET TRACE_MAX_FILE_SIZE mb</code>.
1296
Example:
1297
</p>
1298
<pre>
1299 1300 1301 1302 1303
SET TRACE_MAX_FILE_SIZE 1
</pre>

<h3>Java Code Generation</h3>
<p>
1304
When setting the trace level to <code>INFO</code> or <code>DEBUG</code>,
1305
Java source code is generated as well. This simplifies reproducing problems. The trace file looks like this:
1306
</p>
1307
<pre>
1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315
...
12-20 20:58:09 jdbc[0]:
/**/dbMeta3.getURL();
12-20 20:58:09 jdbc[0]:
/**/dbMeta3.getTables(null, "", null, new String[]{"TABLE", "VIEW"});
...
</pre>
<p>
1316
To filter the Java source code, use the <code>ConvertTraceFile</code> tool as follows:
1317
</p>
1318
<pre>
1319 1320
java -cp h2*.jar org.h2.tools.ConvertTraceFile
    -traceFile "~/test.trace.db" -javaClass "Test"
1321 1322
</pre>
<p>
1323
The generated file <code>Test.java</code> will contain the Java source code.
1324 1325 1326
The generated source code may be too large to compile (the size of a Java method is limited).
If this is the case, the source code needs to be split in multiple methods.
The password is not listed in the trace file and therefore not included in the source code.
1327 1328
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1329
<h2 id="other_logging">Using Other Logging APIs</h2>
1330 1331 1332
<p>
By default, this database uses its own native 'trace' facility. This facility is called 'trace' and not
'log' within this database to avoid confusion with the transaction log. Trace messages can be
1333
written to both file and <code>System.out</code>.
1334 1335
In most cases, this is sufficient, however sometimes it is better to use the same
facility as the application, for example Log4j. To do that, this database support SLF4J.
1336 1337
</p>
<p>
1338
<a href="https://www.slf4j.org/">SLF4J</a> is a simple facade for various logging APIs
1339 1340
and allows to plug in the desired implementation at deployment time.
SLF4J supports implementations such as Logback, Log4j, Jakarta Commons Logging (JCL),
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1341
Java logging, x4juli, and Simple Log.
1342 1343 1344 1345
</p>
<p>
To enable SLF4J, set the file trace level to 4 in the database URL:
</p>
1346
<pre>
1347 1348 1349 1350
jdbc:h2:~/test;TRACE_LEVEL_FILE=4
</pre>
<p>
Changing the log mechanism is not possible after the database is open, that means
1351
executing the SQL statement <code>SET TRACE_LEVEL_FILE 4</code>
1352 1353
when the database is already open will not have the desired effect.
To use SLF4J, all required jar files need to be in the classpath.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1354
The logger name is <code>h2database</code>.
1355
If it does not work, check the file <code>&lt;database&gt;.trace.db</code> for error messages.
1356 1357
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1358
<h2 id="read_only">Read Only Databases</h2>
1359 1360 1361
<p>
If the database files are read-only, then the database is read-only as well.
It is not possible to create new tables, add or modify data in this database.
1362
Only <code>SELECT</code> and <code>CALL</code> statements are allowed.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1363 1364
To create a read-only database, close the database.
Then, make the database file read-only.
1365
When you open the database now, it is read-only.
1366
There are two ways an application can find out whether database is read-only:
1367 1368
by calling <code>Connection.isReadOnly()</code>
or by executing the SQL statement <code>CALL READONLY()</code>.
1369
</p>
1370 1371 1372 1373
<p>
Using the <a href="#custom_access_mode">Custom Access Mode</a> <code>r</code>
the database can also be opened in read-only mode, even if the database file is not read only.
</p>
1374

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1375
<h2 id="database_in_zip">Read Only Databases in Zip or Jar File</h2>
1376
<p>
1377
To create a read-only database in a zip file, first create a regular persistent database, and then create a backup.
1378
The database must not have pending changes, that means you need to close all connections to the database first.
1379
To speed up opening the read-only database and running queries, the database should be closed using <code>SHUTDOWN DEFRAG</code>.
1380 1381 1382 1383
If you are using a database named <code>test</code>, an easy way to create a zip file is using the
<code>Backup</code> tool. You can start the tool from the command line, or from within the
H2 Console (Tools - Backup). Please note that the database must be closed when the backup
is created. Therefore, the SQL statement <code>BACKUP TO</code> can not be used.
1384 1385
</p>
<p>
1386
When the zip file is created, you can open the database in the zip file using the following database URL:
1387
</p>
1388
<pre>
1389 1390 1391
jdbc:h2:zip:~/data.zip!/test
</pre>
<p>
1392
Databases in zip files are read-only. The performance for some queries will be slower than when using
1393 1394
a regular database, because random access in zip files is not supported (only streaming). How much this
affects the performance depends on the queries and the data. The database
1395
is not read in memory; therefore large databases are supported as well. The same indexes are used as when using
1396 1397
a regular database.
</p>
1398 1399 1400
<p>
If the database is larger than a few megabytes, performance is much better if the database file is split into multiple smaller files,
because random access in compressed files is not possible.
1401
See also the sample application <a href="https://github.com/h2database/h2database/tree/master/h2/src/test/org/h2/samples/ReadOnlyDatabaseInZip.java">ReadOnlyDatabaseInZip</a>.
1402
</p>
1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409 1410

<h3>Opening a Corrupted Database</h3>
<p>
If a database cannot be opened because the boot info (the SQL script that is run at startup)
is corrupted, then the database can be opened by specifying a database event listener.
The exceptions are logged, but opening the database will continue.
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1411
<h2 id="computed_columns">Computed Columns / Function Based Index</h2>
1412
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1413
A computed column is a column whose value is calculated before storing.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1414
The formula is evaluated when the row is inserted, and re-evaluated every time the row is updated.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420
One use case is to automatically update the last-modification time:
</p>
<pre>
CREATE TABLE TEST(ID INT, NAME VARCHAR, LAST_MOD TIMESTAMP AS NOW());
</pre>
<p>
1421
Function indexes are not directly supported by this database, but they can be emulated
1422
by using computed columns. For example, if an index on the upper-case version of
1423 1424
a column is required, create a computed column with the upper-case version of the original column,
and create an index for this column:
1425
</p>
1426
<pre>
1427
CREATE TABLE ADDRESS(
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1428 1429 1430
    ID INT PRIMARY KEY,
    NAME VARCHAR,
    UPPER_NAME VARCHAR AS UPPER(NAME)
1431 1432 1433 1434
);
CREATE INDEX IDX_U_NAME ON ADDRESS(UPPER_NAME);
</pre>
<p>
1435
When inserting data, it is not required (and not allowed) to specify a value for the upper-case
1436 1437 1438
version of the column, because the value is generated. But you can use the
column when querying the table:
</p>
1439
<pre>
1440 1441 1442 1443
INSERT INTO ADDRESS(ID, NAME) VALUES(1, 'Miller');
SELECT * FROM ADDRESS WHERE UPPER_NAME='MILLER';
</pre>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1444
<h2 id="multi_dimensional">Multi-Dimensional Indexes</h2>
1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462
<p>
A tool is provided to execute efficient multi-dimension (spatial) range queries.
This database does not support a specialized spatial index (R-Tree or similar).
Instead, the B-Tree index is used. For each record, the multi-dimensional key
is converted (mapped) to a single dimensional (scalar) value.
This value specifies the location on a space-filling curve.
</p><p>
Currently, Z-order (also called N-order or Morton-order) is used;
Hilbert curve could also be used, but the implementation is more complex.
The algorithm to convert the multi-dimensional value is called bit-interleaving.
The scalar value is indexed using a B-Tree index (usually using a computed column).
</p><p>
The method can result in a drastic performance improvement
over just using an index on the first column. Depending on the
data and number of dimensions, the improvement is usually higher than factor 5.
The tool generates a SQL query from a specified multi-dimensional range.
The method used is not database dependent, and the tool can easily be ported to other databases.
For an example how to use the tool, please have a look at the sample code provided
1463
in <code>TestMultiDimension.java</code>.
1464 1465
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1466
<h2 id="user_defined_functions">User-Defined Functions and Stored Procedures</h2>
1467 1468 1469 1470
<p>
In addition to the built-in functions, this database supports user-defined Java functions.
In this database, Java functions can be used as stored procedures as well.
A function must be declared (registered) before it can be used.
1471
A function can be defined using source code, or as a reference to
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1472
a compiled class that is available in the classpath. By default, the
1473
function aliases are stored in the current schema.
1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479
</p>

<h3>Referencing a Compiled Method</h3>
<p>
When referencing a method, the class must already be compiled and
included in the classpath where the database is running.
1480
Only static Java methods are supported; both the class and the method must be public.
1481
Example Java class:
1482
</p>
1483
<pre>
1484 1485
package acme;
import java.math.*;
1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492
public class Function {
    public static boolean isPrime(int value) {
        return new BigInteger(String.valueOf(value)).isProbablePrime(100);
    }
}
</pre>
<p>
1493
The Java function must be registered in the database by calling <code>CREATE ALIAS ... FOR</code>:
1494
</p>
1495
<pre>
1496
CREATE ALIAS IS_PRIME FOR "acme.Function.isPrime";
1497 1498
</pre>
<p>
1499
For a complete sample application, see <code>src/test/org/h2/samples/Function.java</code>.
1500 1501
</p>

1502 1503 1504 1505
<h3>Declaring Functions as Source Code</h3>
<p>
When defining a function alias with source code, the database tries to compile
the source code using the Sun Java compiler (the class <code>com.sun.tools.javac.Main</code>)
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1506 1507 1508 1509
if the <code>tools.jar</code> is in the classpath. If not, <code>javac</code> is run as a separate process.
Only the source code is stored in the database; the class is compiled each time the database is re-opened.
Source code is usually passed as dollar quoted text to avoid escaping problems, however single quotes can be used as well.
Example:
1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519
</p>
<pre>
CREATE ALIAS NEXT_PRIME AS $$
String nextPrime(String value) {
    return new BigInteger(value).nextProbablePrime().toString();
}
$$;
</pre>
<p>
By default, the three packages <code>java.util, java.math, java.sql</code> are imported.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1520 1521
The method name (<code>nextPrime</code> in the example above) is ignored.
Method overloading is not supported when declaring functions as source code, that means only one method may be declared for an alias.
1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548
If different import statements are required, they must be declared at the beginning
and separated with the tag <code>@CODE</code>:
</p>
<pre>
CREATE ALIAS IP_ADDRESS AS $$
import java.net.*;
@CODE
String ipAddress(String host) throws Exception {
    return InetAddress.getByName(host).getHostAddress();
}
$$;
</pre>
<p>
The following template is used to create a complete Java class:
</p>
<pre>
package org.h2.dynamic;
&lt; import statements before the tag @CODE; if not set:
import java.util.*;
import java.math.*;
import java.sql.*;
&gt;
public class &lt;aliasName&gt; {
    public static &lt;sourceCode&gt;
}
</pre>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555
<h3>Method Overloading</h3>
<p>
Multiple methods may be bound to a SQL function if the class is already compiled and included in the classpath.
Each Java method must have a different number of arguments.
Method overloading is not supported when declaring functions as source code.
</p>

1556 1557
<h3>Function Data Type Mapping</h3>
<p>
1558 1559 1560 1561 1562
Functions that accept non-nullable parameters such as <code>int</code>
will not be called if one of those parameters is <code>NULL</code>.
Instead, the result of the function is <code>NULL</code>.
If the function should be called if a parameter is <code>NULL</code>, you need
to use <code>java.lang.Integer</code> instead.
1563
</p>
1564 1565
<p>
SQL types are mapped to Java classes and vice-versa as in the JDBC API. For details, see <a href="datatypes.html">Data Types</a>.
1566
There are a few special cases: <code>java.lang.Object</code> is mapped to
1567 1568 1569 1570
<code>OTHER</code> (a serialized object). Therefore,
<code>java.lang.Object</code> can not be used
to match all SQL types (matching all SQL types is not supported). The second special case is <code>Object[]</code>:
arrays of any class are mapped to <code>ARRAY</code>.
1571
Objects of type <code>org.h2.value.Value</code> (the internal value class) are passed through without conversion.
1572
</p>
1573

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1574
<h3>Functions That Require a Connection</h3>
1575
<p>
1576
If the first parameter of a Java function is a <code>java.sql.Connection</code>, then the connection
1577
to database is provided. This connection does not need to be closed before returning.
1578 1579
When calling the method from within the SQL statement, this connection parameter
does not need to be (can not be) specified.
1580 1581
</p>

1582
<h3>Functions Throwing an Exception</h3>
1583
<p>
1584
If a function throws an exception, then the current statement is rolled back
1585
and the exception is thrown to the application.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1586
SQLException are directly re-thrown to the calling application;
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1587
all other exceptions are first converted to a SQLException.
1588 1589
</p>

1590
<h3>Functions Returning a Result Set</h3>
1591
<p>
1592
Functions may returns a result set. Such a function can be called with the <code>CALL</code> statement:
1593
</p>
1594
<pre>
1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604
public static ResultSet query(Connection conn, String sql) throws SQLException {
    return conn.createStatement().executeQuery(sql);
}

CREATE ALIAS QUERY FOR "org.h2.samples.Function.query";
CALL QUERY('SELECT * FROM TEST');
</pre>

<h3>Using SimpleResultSet</h3>
<p>
1605
A function can create a result set using the <code>SimpleResultSet</code> tool:
1606
</p>
1607
<pre>
1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613
import org.h2.tools.SimpleResultSet;
...
public static ResultSet simpleResultSet() throws SQLException {
    SimpleResultSet rs = new SimpleResultSet();
    rs.addColumn("ID", Types.INTEGER, 10, 0);
    rs.addColumn("NAME", Types.VARCHAR, 255, 0);
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1614 1615
    rs.addRow(0, "Hello");
    rs.addRow(1, "World");
1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624
    return rs;
}

CREATE ALIAS SIMPLE FOR "org.h2.samples.Function.simpleResultSet";
CALL SIMPLE();
</pre>

<h3>Using a Function as a Table</h3>
<p>
1625
A function that returns a result set can be used like a table.
1626
However, in this case the function is called at least twice:
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1627
first while parsing the statement to collect the column names
1628
(with parameters set to <code>null</code> where not known at compile time).
1629
And then, while executing the statement to get the data (maybe multiple times if this is a join).
1630
If the function is called just to get the column list, the URL of the connection passed to the function is
1631 1632
<code>jdbc:columnlist:connection</code>. Otherwise, the URL of the connection is
<code>jdbc:default:connection</code>.
1633
</p>
1634
<pre>
1635 1636
public static ResultSet getMatrix(Connection conn, Integer size)
        throws SQLException {
1637 1638 1639
    SimpleResultSet rs = new SimpleResultSet();
    rs.addColumn("X", Types.INTEGER, 10, 0);
    rs.addColumn("Y", Types.INTEGER, 10, 0);
1640 1641
    String url = conn.getMetaData().getURL();
    if (url.equals("jdbc:columnlist:connection")) {
1642 1643
        return rs;
    }
1644 1645
    for (int s = size.intValue(), x = 0; x &lt; s; x++) {
        for (int y = 0; y &lt; s; y++) {
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1646
            rs.addRow(x, y);
1647
        }
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1648
    }
1649 1650 1651 1652
    return rs;
}

CREATE ALIAS MATRIX FOR "org.h2.samples.Function.getMatrix";
1653
SELECT * FROM MATRIX(4) ORDER BY X, Y;
1654 1655
</pre>

1656

1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680
<h2 id="pluggable_tables">Pluggable or User-Defined Tables</h2>
<p>
For situations where you need to expose other data-sources to the SQL engine as a table,
there are "pluggable tables".
For some examples, have a look at the code in <code>org.h2.test.db.TestTableEngines</code>.
</p>
<p>
In order to create your own TableEngine, you need to implement the <code>org.h2.api.TableEngine</code> interface e.g.
something like this:
<pre>
package acme;
public static class MyTableEngine implements org.h2.api.TableEngine {

    private static class MyTable extends org.h2.table.TableBase {
        .. rather a lot of code here...
    }

    public EndlessTable createTable(CreateTableData data) {
        return new EndlessTable(data);
    }
}
</pre>
and then create the table from SQL like this:
<pre>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1681
CREATE TABLE TEST(ID INT, NAME VARCHAR)
1682
    ENGINE "acme.MyTableEngine";
1683 1684
</pre>
</p>
1685 1686
<p>
It is also possible to pass in parameters to the table engine, like so:
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1687
</p>
1688 1689 1690
<pre>
CREATE TABLE TEST(ID INT, NAME VARCHAR) ENGINE "acme.MyTableEngine" WITH "param1", "param2";
</pre>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1691
<p>
1692 1693
In which case the parameters are passed down in the tableEngineParams field of the CreateTableData object.
</p>
1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702
<p>
It is also possible to specify default table engine params on schema creation:
</p>
<pre>
CREATE SCHEMA TEST_SCHEMA WITH "param1", "param2";
</pre>
<p>
Params from the schema are used when CREATE TABLE issued on this schema does not have its own engine params specified.
</p>
1703

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1704
<h2 id="triggers">Triggers</h2>
1705 1706 1707 1708
<p>
This database supports Java triggers that are called before or after a row is updated, inserted or deleted.
Triggers can be used for complex consistency checks, or to update related data in the database.
It is also possible to use triggers to simulate materialized views.
1709 1710
For a complete sample application, see <code>src/test/org/h2/samples/TriggerSample.java</code>.
A Java trigger must implement the interface <code>org.h2.api.Trigger</code>. The trigger class must be available
1711 1712
in the classpath of the database engine (when using the server mode, it must be in the classpath
of the server).
1713
</p>
1714
<pre>
1715 1716 1717
import org.h2.api.Trigger;
...
public class TriggerSample implements Trigger {
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1718

1719 1720
    public void init(Connection conn, String schemaName, String triggerName,
            String tableName, boolean before, int type) {
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1721 1722
        // initialize the trigger object is necessary
    }
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1723

1724 1725 1726
    public void fire(Connection conn,
            Object[] oldRow, Object[] newRow)
            throws SQLException {
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1727 1728
        // the trigger is fired
    }
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1729

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1730 1731 1732 1733 1734 1735
    public void close() {
        // the database is closed
    }

    public void remove() {
        // the trigger was dropped
1736
    }
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1737

1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743
}
</pre>
<p>
The connection can be used to query or update data in other tables.
The trigger then needs to be defined in the database:
</p>
1744
<pre>
1745
CREATE TRIGGER INV_INS AFTER INSERT ON INVOICE
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1746
    FOR EACH ROW CALL "org.h2.samples.TriggerSample"
1747 1748
</pre>
<p>
1749
The trigger can be used to veto a change by throwing a <code>SQLException</code>.
1750
</p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761
<p>
As an alternative to implementing the <code>Trigger</code> interface,
an application can extend the abstract class <code>org.h2.tools.TriggerAdapter</code>.
This will allows to use the <code>ResultSet</code> interface within trigger implementations.
In this case, only the <code>fire</code> method needs to be implemented:
</p>
<pre>
import org.h2.tools.TriggerAdapter;
...
public class TriggerSample implements TriggerAdapter {

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1762
    public void fire(Connection conn, ResultSet oldRow, ResultSet newRow)
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768
            throws SQLException {
        // the trigger is fired
    }

}
</pre>
1769

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1770
<h2 id="compacting">Compacting a Database</h2>
1771
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1772
Empty space in the database file re-used automatically. When closing the database,
christian.peter.io's avatar
christian.peter.io committed
1773
the database is automatically compacted for up to 200 milliseconds by default. To compact more,
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1774 1775 1776
use the SQL statement SHUTDOWN COMPACT. However re-creating the database may further
reduce the database size because this will re-build the indexes.
Here is a sample function to do this:
1777
</p>
1778
<pre>
1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788
public static void compact(String dir, String dbName,
        String user, String password) throws Exception {
    String url = "jdbc:h2:" + dir + "/" + dbName;
    String file = "data/test.sql";
    Script.execute(url, user, password, file);
    DeleteDbFiles.execute(dir, dbName, true);
    RunScript.execute(url, user, password, file, null, false);
}
</pre>
<p>
1789 1790
See also the sample application <code>org.h2.samples.Compact</code>.
The commands <code>SCRIPT / RUNSCRIPT</code> can be used as well to create a backup
1791 1792 1793
of a database and re-build the database from the script.
</p>

Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1794
<h2 id="cache_settings">Cache Settings</h2>
1795
<p>
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1796
The database keeps most frequently used data in the main memory.
1797
The amount of memory used for caching can be changed using the setting
1798 1799 1800
<code>CACHE_SIZE</code>. This setting can be set in the database connection URL
(<code>jdbc:h2:~/test;CACHE_SIZE=131072</code>), or it can be changed at runtime using
<code>SET CACHE_SIZE size</code>.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1801
The size of the cache, as represented by <code>CACHE_SIZE</code> is measured in KB, with each KB being 1024 bytes.
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1802
This setting has no effect for in-memory databases.
1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810
For persistent databases, the setting is stored in the database and re-used when the database is opened
the next time. However, when opening an existing database, the cache size is set to at most
half the amount of memory available for the virtual machine (Runtime.getRuntime().maxMemory()),
even if the cache size setting stored in the database is larger; however the setting stored in the database
is kept. Setting the cache size in the database URL or explicitly using <code>SET CACHE_SIZE</code>
overrides this value (even if larger than the physical memory).
To get the current used maximum cache size, use the query
<code>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SETTINGS WHERE NAME = 'info.CACHE_MAX_SIZE'</code>
1811
</p><p>
1812
An experimental scan-resistant cache algorithm "Two Queue" (2Q) is available.
1813
To enable it, append <code>;CACHE_TYPE=TQ</code> to the database URL.
1814
The cache might not actually improve performance.
1815 1816
If you plan to use it, please run your own test cases first.
</p><p>
1817 1818 1819 1820
Also included is an experimental second level soft reference cache.
Rows in this cache are only garbage collected on low memory.
By default the second level cache is disabled.
To enable it, use the prefix <code>SOFT_</code>.
1821
Example: <code>jdbc:h2:~/test;CACHE_TYPE=SOFT_LRU</code>.
1822
The cache might not actually improve performance.
1823
If you plan to use it, please run your own test cases first.
1824
</p><p>
1825
To get information about page reads and writes, and the current caching algorithm in use,
1826
call <code>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SETTINGS</code>. The number of pages read / written
Thomas Mueller's avatar
Thomas Mueller committed
1827
is listed.
1828 1829 1830 1831
</p>

<!-- [close] { --></div></td></tr></table><!-- } --><!-- analytics --></body></html>